EDITORIAL Split-mil’ tax battle has already begun With three months to go before the November elec tion. sparks have already begun to fly in the battles over statewide ballot measures. It is a safe bet that the most hard fought campaign will be over the OCA's anti-homosexual Measure 9. But following a close sec ond will most likely be the proposed "split-roll’' prop erty tax amendment to Measure 5. Measure 7, as the split-roll tax will appear on the November ballot, is sponsored by Oregon Fair Share and aims at restoring between 60 percent and 70 per cent of the revenue lost under Measure 5. Before Measure 5. homeowners and commercial property owners paid different property tax rates. After Measure 5. rates for both types of property became equal, and will eventually settle at $15 per $1,000 of assessed value. Measure 7 would amend Measure 5 by setting commercial-property tax rates at $30 per $1.000, still less than what they were before Measure 5. Already, there have been reports of landlords threatening to raise rents $50 to $100 per month, busi nesses laying people off and/or increasing prices to off set what they are portraying as a tax increase. Such claims are patently false and to act on them would be just short of criminal. Currently, commereial-property taxes are set at $25 per SI .000. In pre-Mcasure 5 Lane County, those taxes were $31.44 per $1,000. Setting them at the proposed $30 per SI ,000 would be an increase only in the sense that businesses would not receive continued windfall savings. The thinly-veiled attempts at extortion by land lords who oppose Measure 7 must be exposed for the hypocritical double speak that they are. Primarily, why do rents need to increase $50 per month when proper ty taxes are raised by $5 per $1,000, yet they did not decrease by S50 when property taxes fall by more than $6 per $1.000. Something's rotten in Denmark. The benefits of Measure 7 are many. Not only would the meusure replace much of the revenue lost under Measure 5. the saved money would be directed solely at education, thus freeing up the millions of dol lars in the state's general fund that would have gone to education, short-changing other state services. Measure 7 would also provide for rent relief, something not found in Measure 5. Some people voted for Measure 5 to punish what they perceived to be wasteful state-government. Most people voted for Measure 5 because property taxes were simply too high, and therefore have little reasbn not to vote for Measure 7. Homeowners would still get their tax relief, and the state would get a reprieve. LETTERS POLICY The Oregon Daily Emerald will attempt to print all letters containing comments on topics of interest to the University community. Letters to the editor must Ik; limited to no more than 250 words, legible, signed and the identification of the writer must be verified when the letter is submitted. Commentaries should be between 750 and 1,000 words, legible and signed, and the identification of the writer must be verified upon submission. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for grammar, style and length if necessary. _ Oregon Daily PO BO» I'VJ i UOI Ottt C.ON t '401 The Oregon Daly Emerald • pubaahad dady Monday through Friday during tha achoai year and Tuaaday and Thursday during tha aummer by tha Oregon Daay l marred Pubaalung Co Inc . re tha Uwrermfy ot Oregon. Eugana. Oregon Tha Emerald oparreaa independently ot tha Unnrerety arih ofticae a Suaa 300 ot tha Erb Memorial Union and a a member ot tha Aaaooatad Preaa Tha E marred a private property Tha unamtui removal or uta of papart a proaacvt aMabylaar Cdder: Pre MMach daoatlole Eddore Tan Nall. OaraTyn Treppa QrapMee EdNer Jan Paatay EdHortat EdKor Mann Faher MgM Edaar Pai Mreacn Data ream Tachntclan Todd Wamo »d»anta»«g: Sham Barvan, Jana bore. Oaren Oh. Sarah Quabnan. Carhanna Royie. CliaiHad Paggy McGinn. Ibnga ■ualwna: Kathy Carbone. Supmrma Production tngnd twee Production CoaOnmot Stacy Mfttfiai. Janmtar Roland General Manager Judy fbadl Emerald k»MH omc* n. k/ivwyi _M*-un _MM1I2 _Mt-1712 _UMM1 THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME../NEK'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME ... THERE'5 NO PLACE ^LfKE HOME “RC6S I KNEW WE SHOULDN’T HAVE GIVEN HIM THOSE. DAMN SUPPERS! ___^ COMMENTARY Sales tax places burden on poor By Jason W Moore Gov. Barbara Roberts' failed tax package cer tainly left something to be desired, continuing to place the heaviest tax burden on those least able to pay. None theless. it represented a real op portunity for much-needed lax reform, oven if it was only a step in the right direction. Sad ly. that opportunity has been, for the moment, shot to hell. Kotxirtx proposed a new sales lax of 3.5 percent on goods only, reduced property taxes from the current {post-Moasuro 5) S25 per $1,000 assessed val ue to $15 for homeowners and $20 for commercial property owners and slightly cut person al state Income taxes. The most drastic change was the intro duction of a sales tax. an idea that has never received the ap proval of more than 29 percent of Oregon voters during its nu merous appearances on the bal . lot. Mainstream debate over the sales tax often ignores the larg er issue, namely, that the sales lax Is both economically and socially Irresponsible — it Is a fundamentally regressive tax. The poor and working class, who consumo virtually all they earn, are, not surprisingly, hit hardest by a tax on consump tion A working class family that buys a now refrigerator pays considerably more tax dollars as a proportion of its to tal income than its uppor-mid dln class counterparts who do the same. A significantly larger part of upper-middle class in come Is directed not into con sumption but into investment — largely speculation that amounts to so much paper shuffling, with no material ben efit to anyone not woalthy enough to own a stock portfo lio. Building on the above exam ple. we can see the economy benefits more from tho pur chase of a refrigerator than from the purchase o! stocn (more monoy. to be ugain di rected into consumpllon, finds Its way into the hands of work ers through the production, transport and sale of a manu factured good instead of into those of stockbrokers and law yers involved in high finance, probably only to be invested unproductively again ... ). So. why impose' a tax that would increase the price of manufac tured goods, thereby reducing consumer confidence, purchas ing power and consequently, overall employment? Roberts pays lip-service to lessoning the tax's rogrosstvity by exempting food arid health care. She fails to take the one step that would really have an impact — taxing services, such as the work dono by high-pow ered lawyers, accountants and stockbrokers. Those, of course, are services that businesses use regularly, and that are already prlcod out of reach of evon many middle class consumers. Proponents claim that the sales tax is a way to get at some of thoso previously untaxod. such as tourists and drug doal ors. In doing so. howover. the sales tax serves to tax children, the elderly and the destitute. Is this a fair tax for Oregon? A fair alternative to the sales tax is a tax on income produc ing property and Roberts right ly proposed such a tax In hor package. Conservatives claim that his will cost jobs and raise prices. A slate's taxation poli cies. however, have loss to do with attraction and retention of business and Investment than do. for instance, a good educa tion system, a workable Infra structure. or a viable pool of consumers ready to spend. Di minished human services can only harm all three of these, and harm the “good buslnoss climato." What’s more, "If business was not leaving the state In 1990 because of (pre-Measure 5) property taxes, why would moy itjavi! ihm.uum! wb ruium thorn to the 1090 lovel?" asks Joy Marshall, local organi/or for Lane Fair Share, referring to her organization's tax proposal. The same logic applies to the argument that this will result in higher prices for consumers We know they didn't lower prices when taxes fell; why should they raise prices when taxes are restored to 1990 lev els? The real key to tax fairness, as Roberts must realize, is taxa tion that places the burden on those most able to pay. The tax structure most capable of giving genuine tax relief for Oregon homeowners, promoting a healthy economy and provid ing the full rangii of human ser vices is progressive taxation that includes not Just fair taxes on commercial property but taxes on personal wealth and Income. Creating higher tax brackets for wealthier individu als (Oregon's income tax lops out at only $10,000 per year), and Inheritance and luxury tax es are crucial options that the Roberts plan overlooked. Oregon Fair Share (Lane County chapter; 344-0650) has placed the Fair Homeowners and Renter's Relief Measure on the November ballot (Measure 7). This would split the proper ty tax rolls, establish a $30 per $1,000 cap (still lower than pre-Measure 5 levels in Multnomah and Lane counties) on commercial property, pro vide immediate tax relief for homeowners and make up two thirds of the Measure Flvo shortfall. The Roberts' proposal got at least one thing right — those at the top must be taxed fairly for the befit of all. But only the Fair Share initiative carries this thinking to its logical conclu sion. Jason W Moon Is the co-edi tor of the Student Insurgent and co-director of the Center for Contemporary Activism.